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The mono version was deleted in the late 1960s and remained unavailable until 2001. The first United Kingdom release replaced some original songs with tracks from the group's first US LP, Jefferson Airplane Takes Off. The album was initially slow to take off until the release of "Somebody to Love" in March.
Jefferson Airplane ended 1970 with their traditional Thanksgiving Day engagement at the Fillmore East (marking the final performances of the short-lived Creach-era septet) and the release of their first compilation album, The Worst of Jefferson Airplane, which continued their unbroken run of post-1967 chart success, reaching No. 12 on the ...
"It's No Secret" (Marty Balin) – 2:40 from Jefferson Airplane Takes Off (1966) "Come Up the Years" (Balin, Paul Kantner) – 2:34 from Jefferson Airplane Takes Off "My Best Friend" (Skip Spence) – 3:04 from Surrealistic Pillow (1967) "Somebody to Love" (Darby Slick) – 3:00 from Surrealistic Pillow
The Best of Jefferson Airplane: Somebody to Love (2004) Fly Jefferson Airplane (DVD) (2004) The Essential Jefferson Airplane (2005) Best of Jefferson Airplane (2005) High Flying Bird: Live at the Monterey Festival (2006) The Very Best of Jefferson Airplane (2007) Feels Like '67 Again (2007), HHO Multimedia Ltd. London—Concerts during 1967 at ...
"She Has Funny Cars" is a song by the American rock group Jefferson Airplane. Vocalist Marty Balin wrote the lyrics, while guitarist Jorma Kaukonen supplied the music. The song appeared as the opening track on their breakthrough album, Surrealistic Pillow (1967).
Feed Your Head: Live '67–'69 is the 1996 release of songs from the Jefferson Airplane concerts at Winterland, March 1967, and Monterey Pop Festival. It also has live tracks from Bless Its Pointed Little Head.
Live at the Monterey Festival is a live album by the San Francisco rock band Jefferson Airplane, which was released in the United Kingdom and Europe by Thunderbolt Records in 1991. [1] The album was authorized by the band and features the entire set from the group's June 17, 1967, performance at the Monterey Pop Festival . [ 2 ]
1967 trade ad for the single "White Rabbit" is one of Grace Slick's earliest songs, written from December 1965 to January 1966. [12] It uses imagery found in the fantasy works of Lewis Carroll — 1865's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and its 1871 sequel Through the Looking-Glass — such as changing size after taking pills or drinking an unknown liquid.